Iran to import Venezuelan petrol
Hugo Chavez (l) met Iran's president during his two-day visit |
Venezuela has agreed to export petrol to Iran, in a sign of closer ties between two of America's most vocal adversaries.
At the end of a two-day visit to Iran, President Hugo Chavez said Venezuela would supply 20,000 barrels of petrol a day to the country.
Iran is a major oil exporter but lacks domestic refining capability.
Iranian leaders expressed support for the Venezuelan socialist leader's anti-American policies.
Mr Chavez has been using Venezuela's oil wealth to counter US influence in Latin America and to boost ties with nations not friendly with Washington.
"Venezuela has agreed to export 20,000 barrels of petrol daily to Iran from October in a deal worth $800 millon (£485m)," he was quoted as saying by Iranian media.
He added: "This amount will be deposited in a fund established in Iran and will be used to finance purchase of machinery and technology from Iran."
I believe that South America is undergoing a political and philosophical revolution Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Iranian President |
During his visit to Iran, Mr Chavez met Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who supports his anti-US stance.
"America's repeated defeats and its declining grandeur and power are proof of an undeniable change in the world," the ayatollah was quoted by state media as saying.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also insisted that US policies in South America are "doomed to be defeated".
"I believe that South America is undergoing a political and philosophical revolution.
"The nations there have awakened and can no longer bear any bullying and if anyone believes that their beliefs can be defeated by military means they are dead wrong," local media quoted him as saying, according to AFP news agency.
Iran has come under increasing pressure to give up its nuclear ambitions, with US President Barack Obama setting a deadline of later this month for Iran to engage in talks or face sanctions.
The West suspects Iran is secretly trying to build nuclear weapons, while Tehran insists its programme is solely peaceful.